GUN Review

What’s the deal with video game Westerns? There is no deal, that’s the deal.
There are plenty of action games out there set in various time periods
throughout history, but the Old West is a forlorn and forgotten setting. Perhaps
it’s that Hollywood has turned its back on one of the genres that helped build
its empire. Perhaps it’s that the few Western games that have come down the
trail have been so forgettable (quick, name one!). Whatever the reason it’s a
major oversight long overdue for a correction, and I’m not just saying that
because I spent the first six years of my life wanting to be a cowboy. Well the
folks at Neversoft must have wanted to be cowboys and cowgirls too because
they’ve taken a break from creating a steady stream of Tony Hawk games to bring
us a gen-u-ine gun slinging game named, appropriately enough, Gun.

A good cowboy can shoot from the saddle.

Gun is the story of one Colton White, a trapper who along with his father
earns his living hunting food to sell to local towns and passing steamers. His
world is changed forever when a steamboat to which they are selling their latest
kills comes under attack by a vicious gang of outlaws. Colton loses his father
in the fight, but not before his father gives him a token and the mysterious
task of delivering it to a particular lady of the evening at a saloon in a
nearby town. Of course this is just the start of an adventure that pits him
against an evil railroad baron after something that Colton’s ol’ pappy securely
hid away…

Gun is structured a little like the Grand Theft Auto games. The storyline is
advanced by taking on missions at locations clearly marked on your onscreen
“cowboy radar” mini map, and you can choose to move from one story mission to
the next or to take some time to play side missions or just explore the frontier
towns and the badlands in between. And rather than “jacking” passing cars you
can walk up to any horse you see and borrow it for a while. The towns in the
game are of the “living, breathing” variety, with people going about their
cowboy business. You can play the ornery varmint if you like and kill and harass
the locals, or just leave them be. Be careful in choosing the ornery option
though as eventually the town will grow tired of your lawlessness and a posse
will come gunning for you.

With a name like Gun, you’d expect there to be plenty of shootouts. Well
you’re right; Gun is indeed packed with plenty of gunfights. You start the game
with your six-shooter and a rifle, but as the game progresses you’ll pick up an
arsenal of Western weapons from tomahawks to shotguns. Like the rest of the game
gunfights play out from a third-person view in which the left stick moves your
character while the right stick moves your aiming reticule. Like the real
things, the weapons hold only a limited supply of bullets and reloading takes a
little precious time. You can aim down the sights of your rifles to hit longer
range targets, but this is too slow for close-up gunfights. When things are too
close and personal, you can engage the “Quick Draw” feature. Quick Draw is a lot
like Max Payne’s “Bullet Time” in which time slows around you while you can
still fire off shots at regular speed. Quick Draw time is limited, but you can
extend it by making good shots such as headshots. It may not be all that
authentic or realistic, but it’s still a pretty good feature.

Your foes do a pretty good job of scooting around and getting their shots in.
Smart gunplay is a wise choice of tactics as running headlong into a fight is a
good way to get yourself killed. In a somewhat strange gameplay conceit, you
restore your health by taking a swig from your flask. Yup, remember kiddies,
hooch, it does a body good. Depending on the difficulty level you select at the
start of the game, the gunfights will either be pretty easy or pretty hard.
There seems to be some odd balancing with the difficulty levels as “Normal” is
too easy for average gamers and “Hard” can be pretty challenging. I recommend
just sucking it up and going for “Hard”.